Abstract

The current paper investigates the value and application of a range of physiological and neuroscientific techniques in applied marketing research and consumer science, highlighting new insights from research in social psychology and neuroscience. We review measures of sweat secretion, heart rate, facial muscle activity, eye movements, and electrical brain activity, using techniques including skin conductance, pupillometry, eyetracking, and magnetic brain imaging. For each measure, after a brief explanation of the underlying technique, we illustrate concepts and mechanisms that the measure allows researchers in marketing and consumer science to investigate, with a focus on consumer attitudes and behavior. By providing reviews on recent research that applied these methods in consumer science and relevant related fields, we also highlight methodological and theoretical strengths and limitations, with an emphasis on ecological validity. We argue that the inclusion of physiological and neuroscientific techniques can advance consumer research by providing insights into the often unconscious mechanisms underlying consumer behavior. Therefore, such technologies can help researchers and marketing practitioners understand the mechanisms of consumer behavior and improve predictions of consumer behavior.

Highlights

  • One of the goals of consumer scientists and marketing practitioners is to identify, predict, and understand the behavior of consumers

  • The current paper aims to highlight how physiological and neuroscientific measures can be applied to complement research in consumer and marketing science

  • Drawing from recent studies in the field and current insights from research in relevant related fields, we aim to provide an overview of the application of the most prominent physiological and neuroscientific methods, covering the electrodermal response, heart rate, facial muscle activity, pupillometry, eye tracking, electrical brain activity, near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

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Summary

Introduction

One of the goals of consumer scientists and marketing practitioners is to identify, predict, and understand the behavior of consumers. Early research in the 1960s used measures of pupil dilation to predict sales rates of products and effectiveness of advertisements (Krugman, 1965, but see Goldwater, 1972; Stewart and Furse, 1982; Wang and Minor, 2008). Research in consumer science has Psychophysiology and Neuroscience in Marketing implemented neuroscience-based techniques and identified the brain mechanisms underlying consumer behavior and decision making (Yoon et al, 2006; Lee et al, 2007; Hubert and Kenning, 2008; Kable, 2011; Plassmann et al, 2011, 2015; Camerer and Yoon, 2015; Hsu and Yoon, 2015; Genevsky et al, 2017; Hsu, 2017; Karmarkar and Plassmann, 2017 for an extended discussion of this issue). Neuroimaging using Positron emission tomography (PET) has been patented as a marketing tool by Zaltman and Kosslyn (2000), fMRI has largely superceded PET as a neuroimaging technique in marketing research

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